What's new

Covid-19: India lacks capacity to stop the contagion but Indians are unlikely to complain

beijingwalker

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 4, 2011
Messages
65,195
Reaction score
-55
Country
China
Location
China
Covid-19: India lacks capacity to stop the contagion but Indians are unlikely to complain
With one-third of India living in single rooms, self-quarantine is not possible. State capacity is limited. But Indians, used to misery, are fatalists and will take the epidemic in their stride
Aakar Patel
Published: 22 Mar 2020, 8:30 AM

The population of India in the first census of 1872 was 206,162,360. Meaning 20.61 Crore on the subcontinent, including what is today Bangladesh and Pakistan. In 1881, this rose by 23% to 25.38 Crore. Some of this was due to an increase in population and some due to the increase in territory controlled by the British, which kept expanding over the years. In 1911, the population grew by 7% over the decade to 31 Crore.

However, in 1921, after 10 years it remained at 31 Crore.

Why did the population not grow over an entire decade? The answer is an H1N1 virus which is called the Spanish Influenza. This was an epidemic like the Coronavirus and it killed off the entire population growth of a decade in India. Around 1.5 crore people and most likely more than that were killed by it.

The flu came to India from Europe, where it broke out in military hospitals towards the end of the first world war. We don’t know how it originated but it is possible that it was transferred from birds or animals being slaughtered for the armies’ messes. Indian regiments which fought for the British empire returned to Bombay after Germany surrendered in 1918 and the fighting ended. They brought the virus with them, just as those coming from abroad have brought the Coronavirus.

Many nations had fought the war including the United States and so the returning soldiers took the disease around the world. It is thought that 25% of the world’s population was infected and probably killed around 10% of those infected.

These are very high rates of both transmission and of fatality and that is what we are faced today with the Coronavirus. The problem with a new virus is that it has no cure.

There is no medicine that can be taken, and it has the ability to spread very rapidly as we are seeing in India today.

Person A is infected and may or may not show symptoms, he passes them on to the people he has been near, and they pass the virus on to the people they come in contact with. And all this happens on the same day. There is no decrease in the lethality of the virus as it passes from one person to another and the virus does not dilute.

There are ways in which the chain of the spreading can be halted and that is to end contact between all people as far as possible. This ensures that those who are infected have the time for the disease to pass through their system. Some survive and others will not. But the isolation ensures that even those who are infected keep the disease to themselves. The point of isolation is not the benefit of the patient but the others around him.

China halted the spread of Coronavirus through lockdowns of entire cities. People were banned from travelling outside their homes. The government ensured that food was supplied to each home by trained people. In Europe, it is not possible for democratic states to order or enforce absolute shutdowns like China. This is the reason that the spread of the virus in Italy and now Spain is faster and the death rate higher than in China. Of course Europeans have been practising social distancing and self-quarantine as we have seen in the videos, but this is not as effective as a total lockdown.

On Friday, in Italy (which has a population of less than Gujarat) 627 people died and another 6,000 cases of Coronavirus infection were recorded. Just in one day. And unless the chain is broken, or the virus itself mutates into something less infectious and less lethal, the infection spreads exponentially.

We are familiar with exponential growth through the story of the man who asks the King to give him one grain of rice for the first square of the chessboard, then double it with each square. That sequence produces 1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128,256,512,1024 and 2048 by just the 12th square. Now assume that these are people and the 1 represents the first infected person entering the country. By the time you reach the 64th square, everybody has been infected except a few. This is what will happen with Coronavirus.

The Prime Minister said we should break the chain of transmission for a few hours on one day, Sunday. This is not a solution. The fact is that India has no defence against Coronavirus. One third of all Indians live in one room. Another one third live in 2 rooms.

They cannot self-quarantine or isolate themselves and if infected, they will pass it on to others.

It is impossible for India to control an epidemic. We do not have the state capacity of China to deliver food by trained and protected individuals to each home and order everyone to stay at home. That will not happen in India.

We also do not have the healthcare to save those who will be infected and can be saved medically because we do not have the capacity there either. India spends four times on defence of what it does on health. Last year, the government gave only Rs 3200 crore to Ayushman Bharat (what is called Modicare). We spent Rs 59,000 crore only on 36 Rafale fighters. India has 70,000 hospital beds and only a few ventilators.

Those infected who might be able to be saved in another country will die in India. This is a fact and we will learn of this very soon as we confront a disease that will kill not in numbers alone but a fraction of the population. The world will notice that India cannot stop the spread of the contagion and there will be consequences of that which we shall soon see and they will not be good for us.

The good thing about India, which perhaps no other country has, is our fatalism. We are so accustomed to extreme deprivation, misery and loss that there will be no revolution, no social upheaval as hundreds of thousands of people will die.

Those of us that survive this plague will carry on just as the survivors of the Spanish Influenza did a century ago.

https://www.nationalheraldindia.com...ontagion-but-indians-are-unlikely-to-complain
 
Last edited:
. .
The fact is laid out for all to see, yet India and Indians refuse to come to term with this fact. Tragedy awaits!
 
.
Indians already have cow piss and cow dung as preventation against the virus.

maxresdefault.jpg
 
. .
The good thing about India, which perhaps no other country has, is our fatalism. We are so accustomed to extreme deprivation, misery and loss that there will be no revolution, no social upheaval as hundreds of thousands of people will die.

This general public mentality saves the govenment a lot of trouble, if people don't care about themselves, who esle would..
 
.
India panic setting in:-
https://www.thehindu.com/news/natio...rch-22-2020/article31133641.ece?homepage=true

Coronavirus live updates | One dead in Mumbai, Bihar; total death toll touches 6
Coronavirus live updates | One dead in Mumbai, Bihar; total death toll touches 6
The Hindu Net Desk
MARCH 22, 2020 10:25 IST
UPDATED: MARCH 22, 2020 13:39


  • According to WHO's March 21 update, there are 267,013 confirmed cases and 11,201 deaths
    At least 350 cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in India as of March 22, of which around 320 are active cases. Five people have died of the COVID-19 till date. According to the Centre, there is no evidence of community transmission yet in the country.

    On Sunday, India is observing a 'Janata Curfew' from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m., called for by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, to practise social distancing in a bid to curtail the spread of the novel coronavirus.

    COVID-19 | Interactive map of confirmed coronavirus cases in India


    The Hindu has brought out an e-book on essential COVID-19 information, in addition to covering the developments related to the coronavirus pandemic as it unfolded. Here are answers from experts on your queries about the virus, a list of State Helpline numbers, and a map of confirmed cases in India.


    The new 24/7 national helpline numbers are 1075 and 1800-112-545 and 011-23978046. Email: ncov2019@gmail.com

    Here are the latest updates:

    1.30 PM | INDIA
    All trains cancelled till March 31
    The Ministry of Railways announced the cancellation of all passenger trains till March 31 in the wake of COVID-19.

    In a statement issued on Sunday, it said that with the exception of goods trains, all services, including passenger trains, long-distance Mail/Express and Intercity trains (including premium trains), will remain cancelled till March 31.

    Bare minimum suburban services and Kolkata metro rail service will continue to run till March 22 midnight, post which they stand cancelled as well.

    The circular added that the trains that started journey before 4 a.m. on March 22 will run up to their destinations.

    1.20 PM | INDIA
    Banks to provide only essential services from tomorrow
    The Indian Banks' Association has said banks will only provide basic services from March 23.

    Cash deposit and withdrawal, clearing of cheques, remittances and government transaction are the essential services that will be provided.

    "We request all our customers to bear with us as all other non-essential services during this period may be suspended," IBA said.

    1.10 PM | PUNJAB

    Punjab orders complete lockdown till March 31
    As the number of COVID-19 confirmed cases in Punjab climbed to 14, the State government ordered a complete lockdown with immediate effect across the State in a bid to check spread of the virus.

    Punjab Chief Minister tweeted on Sunday that a State-wide lock down till March 31 has been ordered.

    “All essential govt services will continue and shops selling essential items such as milk, food items, medicines, etc will be open. All Detuty Commissioners and Senior Superintendent of Police have been directed to implement the restrictions immediately,” said the order issued by Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh.

    In Punjab, as many as 11 positive cases were reported in a single day on March 21.

    Meanwhile, most public places in Punjab, Haryana and Chandigarh wore a deserted look amid the 'Janata Curfew' proposed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    1.05 PM | GUJARAT
    After Ahmedabad, Surat, Rajkot and Vadodara, Gandhinagar too will remain in lockdown till March 25. No public transport services, no commercial and business establishments to operate except essential services.


    1 PM | CHANDIGARH

    Fresh case confirmed in Chandigarh
    A new case of COVID-19 has been confirmed in Chandigarh, taking the total number of COVID-19 positive cases in the city to six, said the government, in a statement on Sunday.

    The man, a secondary contact of the positive case who had returned from United Kingdom, had been tested at Government Medical College and Hospital (GMCH) in Sector 32, and his sample tested positive for coronavirus, said the statement.

    The health condition of all positive cases is stable, it added.


    12.50 PM | WEST BENGAL
    TMC asks its MPs to withdraw from Parliament
    The TMC on Sunday announced that it has given instructions to all its MPs to withdraw from Parliament and return to their constituencies in view of the coronavirus scare.

    TMC Rajya Sabha MP Derek O’Brien has written to presiding officers of both houses urging then to wind up the proceedings of the House on Monday, March 23.

    TMC has 22 MPs in Lok Sabha and 13 in Rajya Sabha


    Read more

    12.40 PM | HYDERABAD
    50 people with travel history stopped near Hyderabad
    Around 50 people, who had arrived from Qatar at Mumbai and were travelling to Hyderabad in a hired bus, were stopped at the border village of Margi on Sunday.

    1x1_spacer.png

    The hired bus that was bringing passengers from Mumbai airport was stopped at a border village near Zaheerabad. All the passengers are being shifted to a quarantine centre in Gachibowli, Hyderabad | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

    After consulting authorities at Hyderabad, the group is to be shifted to a quarantine centre at Gachibowli in Hyderabad. Superintendent of Police S. Chandrasekhar Reddy confirmed that they will be shifted to quarantine centre.



    12.30 PM | KARNATAKA
    Six passengers in Dubai flight show symptoms of COVID-19
    In Bengaluru, six of the 195 passengers from Karnataka who arrived at the Kempegowda International Airport, Bengaluru from Dubai on Sunday have symptoms of COVID-19. They are suspected to have the virus, and their samples will be sent for testing.

    Health and Family Welfare Minister S. Sriramulu said that they have been admitted to the isolation facility of the Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Chest Diseases. He said that the remaining passengers will be taken to Akash Institute of Medical Sciences, Bengaluru.

    12.10 PM | BIHAR
    Bihar reports first death
    Bihar on Sunday reported first its death due to COVID-19. The test of the deceased was found positive. He was also undergoing treatment for kidney ailment at the Patna-based All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS).

    The deceased has been identified as Saif Ali, 38, from Munger district. He had recently returned from Qatar. The AIIMS officials have confirmed that deceased was COVID-19 positive.

    “He had travel history and was put under observation for sometime”, said director of AIIMS Dr. Prabhat Kumar Singh.


    Read more

    12 PM | TAMIL NADU
    Another COVID-19 positive case has been detected in Tamil Nadu. As per preliminary details, the patient is a traveller from Spain, and is undergoing treatment in isolation.


    11.30 AM | MUMBAI


    Mumbai records second COVID-19 death. A 63-year-old man who was admitted in the HN Reliance Hospital succumbed early on Sunday. The patient had diabetes and hypertension and developed acute respiratory distress syndrome leading to his death.


    11 AM | KARNATAKA
    Karnataka seals borders with all States
    The Karnataka government had decided to close all the State borders, Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa announced on Sunday morning. All the upcoming elections would be put off for the time being, he said.

    Victoria Hospital would be used especially to handle COVID-19 cases and the other patients there would be shifted to hospitals elsewhere.


    Read more

    11 AM | NOIDA
    Cluster sealed in Greater Noida after COVID patient detected
    A cluster comprising of commercial establishments and several housing societies was sealed in Greater Noida on Sunday after a COVID-19 positive patient was detected in the area.

    An order issued by B.N Singh, District Magistrate of Gautambuddh Nagar said that all blocks and residential societies in Alpha-1 sector shall remain temporarily sealed from 10 a.m. March 22 (Sunday) till 7 a.m. March 24.

    The order said that the decision was taken after a person residing in B-Block at Alpha 1 was detected COVID-19 positive.

    Any kind of movement by people and vehicles, except for emergency purposes have been prohibited in the area.

    10.30 AM | KARNATAKA
    33-year-old man who came from Australia tests positive
    A 33-year-old person who had arrived in Dharwad, Karnataka from Australia has been tested positive for COVID-19.

    Deputy Commissioner M. Deepa confirmed that he was the 21st case to be reported from Karnataka.

    Read more

    9.40 AM | HYDERABAD
    Prabhas in self-quarantine after returning from film’s shoot abroad
    Actor Prabhas has announced that he is in self-quarantine in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

    In a short statement posted on Twitter, the Baahubali actor said he recently returned from Georgia after completing a film’s shoot and therefore decided to keep himself insolation.

    “On safely returning from my shoot abroad, in light of increasing risks of COVID-19, I have decided to self-quarantine. Hope you all are also taking the necessary precautions to be safe,” Prabhas tweeted on Saturday.

    The actor is currently working on filmmaker Radha Krishna Kumar’s untitled film, which also features Pooja Hedge.


    Read more

    8.20 A.M | PUNJAB

    Punjab orders lockdown in few districts
    Amid rising number of COVID-19 cases, the Punjab government has ordered a lockdown in few districts till March 25 including Shahid Bhagat Singh Nagar (Nawanshahr), Hoshiarpur, Kapurthala and Jalandhar.

    Punjab Chief Secretary Karan Avtar Singh, in a statement said that ''establishments in districts of Nawanshahr and Hoshiarpur have been closed while the partial lockdown has been ordered in Jalandhar with effect from 7 a.m. on March 22 up to midnight of March 25 by the District Magistrate. Likewise, it has also been advised to close down establishments in district Kapurthala from March 23 as a precautionary measures.”


    Read more
    7.30 AM | RAJASTHAN
    Rajasthan announces complete lockdown till March 31
    In a late night decision, the Rajasthan government on March 21 announced a complete lockdown of the State till March 31 to contain the spread of coronavirus. All government and private offices, malls, shops, factories and public transport across the State will remain closed in the duration, while Rajasthan's borders with other States will be sealed.

    Only essential and medical services will be exempted from the lockdown, according to the orders issued after the decision was taken at a high-level meeting presided over by Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot at his residence. Mr. Gehlot said it was necessary for people to “stay indoors” to fight the pandemic.

    Read more


    Stay home for three months, UK tells 1.5 million most at risk
    Up to 1.5 million vulnerable people in Britain, identified as being most at risk from the coronavirus epidemic, should stay at home for at least 12 weeks, the government said Sunday.

    Those with underlying health conditions such as bone or blood cancers, cystic fibrosis, or who have had an organ transplant have been advised by health officials to do all they can to shield themselves from the virus, including confining themselves at home for a long period.

    "People should stay at home, protect our NHS and save lives," Communities secretary Robert Jenrick said in a statement.


    Read more


    Confined by virus, Frenchman runs marathon on his balcony
    In the age of confinement, Elisha Nochomovitz figured out a way to run a marathon anyway back and forth on his balcony.

    That’s right. He ran 42.2 kilometers (26.2 miles) straight, never leaving his 7-meter-long (23-foot) balcony.

    Like athletes who ran around their Wuhan apartments or cyclists who found ways to train in their locked-down Abu Dhabi hotel rooms, Nochomovitz wanted to show others that it’s possible to stay fit as virus containment measures tighten around the world.

    Read more

    How does soap help tackle COVID-19?








    Soap or sanitiser? Which works better?

    Volume 90%
    Why you should pay for quality journalism - Click to know more

    Related Topics
    Coronavirus
    SUBSCRIBE TO OUR DAILY NEWSLETTER

    Comments

    Related Articles

    Watch | What is contact tracing?


    Watch | Soap or sanitiser? Which works better?


 
.
The flu came to India from Europe, where it broke out in military hospitals towards the end of the first world war/

Started the same way in China during American military excercises in China
 
. .
DAWN Pakistan printed this useful article and Indians are triggered, hitting a raw nerve...the comments are full of vitriol and hate, though this is a Reuters report...

Poor Indians flee to villages as coronavirus measures take heavy toll
Reuters March 21, 2020


5e762af7352d6.jpg

Migrant workers and their families board an overcrowded passenger train, after government imposed restrictions on public gatherings in attempts to prevent spread of coronavirus disease (Covid-19), in Mumbai, March 21, 2020. —Reuters
Thousands of poor city migrants whose livelihoods have collapsed due to India’s coronavirus measures headed back to their villages on Saturday, raising fears that the exodus could carry the virus to the countryside.

About one fifth of India’s 271 confirmed coronavirus cases has been reported in the western state of Maharashtra — home to Mumbai, the country’s largest city and economic powerhouse. So far, India has registered four deaths due to the virus.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has urged Indians to stay at home to fight the outbreak. Maharashtra state authorities ordered on Friday the closure of all shops and offices, apart from those providing essential services, until March 31.

For Indians who drive rickshaws or run food stalls, the economic shock of such control measures has been huge, pushing them to leave for family homes where they typically do not pay rent and food is cheaper.

"Work has stopped. I’ll go back and work on the farm," said Rakesh Kumar Gupta, 40, who sells mosquito nets and was heading back to his family house in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

On Saturday, hundreds of people, many young men wearing masks and lugging backpacks, jostled in long queues to board trains at Mumbai’s Lokmanya Tilak Terminus station.

India’s state-run railway operator laid on 17 special train services starting on Friday to ferry people out of the Mumbai area to eastern and northern India, spokesman Shivaji Sutar said.

Health specialists say large-scale population shifts to rural areas could hasten the spread of coronavirus in India, a country of 1.3 billion people with weak public health care — especially in the countryside.

India has about 120 million migrant laborers, according to labour rights group Aajiveeka.

"This really is the beginning of community spread, assuming there haven’t been forerunners," said Dr Rajib Dasgupta, a professor of community health at the Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi.

The Indian Railways spokesman said they were screening passengers and had trained workers on board in case of emergencies. But anxious travelers were cramming into overcrowded trains, according to a Reuters witness, likely increasing the chances of infection.

Highlighting the risk, the Ministry of Railways on Saturday tweeted that a dozen people who had traveled by train in the last few days had tested positive for Covid-19 on Friday.

"Passengers are advised to avoid non-essential travel for the safety of fellow citizens," the ministry added.

India’s Health Ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1542664/p...lages-as-coronavirus-measures-take-heavy-toll
 
.
China should built more and more such capacities and drugs against infectious diseases at China will need it most because China is emerging as the abof many such illnesses which were found in animals only because of their passion of the food which is is not eaten anywhere Such as snakes Cockroaches, bats, rats, frogs, dogs, cats etc.
 
. . .
India panic setting in:-
https://www.thehindu.com/news/natio...rch-22-2020/article31133641.ece?homepage=true

Coronavirus live updates | One dead in Mumbai, Bihar; total death toll touches 6
Coronavirus live updates | One dead in Mumbai, Bihar; total death toll touches 6
The Hindu Net Desk
MARCH 22, 2020 10:25 IST
UPDATED: MARCH 22, 2020 13:39


  • According to WHO's March 21 update, there are 267,013 confirmed cases and 11,201 deaths
    At least 350 cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in India as of March 22, of which around 320 are active cases. Five people have died of the COVID-19 till date. According to the Centre, there is no evidence of community transmission yet in the country.

    On Sunday, India is observing a 'Janata Curfew' from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m., called for by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, to practise social distancing in a bid to curtail the spread of the novel coronavirus.

    COVID-19 | Interactive map of confirmed coronavirus cases in India


    The Hindu has brought out an e-book on essential COVID-19 information, in addition to covering the developments related to the coronavirus pandemic as it unfolded. Here are answers from experts on your queries about the virus, a list of State Helpline numbers, and a map of confirmed cases in India.


    The new 24/7 national helpline numbers are 1075 and 1800-112-545 and 011-23978046. Email: ncov2019@gmail.com

    Here are the latest updates:

    1.30 PM | INDIA
    All trains cancelled till March 31
    The Ministry of Railways announced the cancellation of all passenger trains till March 31 in the wake of COVID-19.

    In a statement issued on Sunday, it said that with the exception of goods trains, all services, including passenger trains, long-distance Mail/Express and Intercity trains (including premium trains), will remain cancelled till March 31.

    Bare minimum suburban services and Kolkata metro rail service will continue to run till March 22 midnight, post which they stand cancelled as well.

    The circular added that the trains that started journey before 4 a.m. on March 22 will run up to their destinations.

    1.20 PM | INDIA
    Banks to provide only essential services from tomorrow
    The Indian Banks' Association has said banks will only provide basic services from March 23.

    Cash deposit and withdrawal, clearing of cheques, remittances and government transaction are the essential services that will be provided.

    "We request all our customers to bear with us as all other non-essential services during this period may be suspended," IBA said.

    1.10 PM | PUNJAB

    Punjab orders complete lockdown till March 31
    As the number of COVID-19 confirmed cases in Punjab climbed to 14, the State government ordered a complete lockdown with immediate effect across the State in a bid to check spread of the virus.

    Punjab Chief Minister tweeted on Sunday that a State-wide lock down till March 31 has been ordered.

    “All essential govt services will continue and shops selling essential items such as milk, food items, medicines, etc will be open. All Detuty Commissioners and Senior Superintendent of Police have been directed to implement the restrictions immediately,” said the order issued by Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh.

    In Punjab, as many as 11 positive cases were reported in a single day on March 21.

    Meanwhile, most public places in Punjab, Haryana and Chandigarh wore a deserted look amid the 'Janata Curfew' proposed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    1.05 PM | GUJARAT
    After Ahmedabad, Surat, Rajkot and Vadodara, Gandhinagar too will remain in lockdown till March 25. No public transport services, no commercial and business establishments to operate except essential services.


    1 PM | CHANDIGARH

    Fresh case confirmed in Chandigarh
    A new case of COVID-19 has been confirmed in Chandigarh, taking the total number of COVID-19 positive cases in the city to six, said the government, in a statement on Sunday.

    The man, a secondary contact of the positive case who had returned from United Kingdom, had been tested at Government Medical College and Hospital (GMCH) in Sector 32, and his sample tested positive for coronavirus, said the statement.

    The health condition of all positive cases is stable, it added.


    12.50 PM | WEST BENGAL
    TMC asks its MPs to withdraw from Parliament
    The TMC on Sunday announced that it has given instructions to all its MPs to withdraw from Parliament and return to their constituencies in view of the coronavirus scare.

    TMC Rajya Sabha MP Derek O’Brien has written to presiding officers of both houses urging then to wind up the proceedings of the House on Monday, March 23.

    TMC has 22 MPs in Lok Sabha and 13 in Rajya Sabha


    Read more

    12.40 PM | HYDERABAD
    50 people with travel history stopped near Hyderabad
    Around 50 people, who had arrived from Qatar at Mumbai and were travelling to Hyderabad in a hired bus, were stopped at the border village of Margi on Sunday.

    1x1_spacer.png

    The hired bus that was bringing passengers from Mumbai airport was stopped at a border village near Zaheerabad. All the passengers are being shifted to a quarantine centre in Gachibowli, Hyderabad | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

    After consulting authorities at Hyderabad, the group is to be shifted to a quarantine centre at Gachibowli in Hyderabad. Superintendent of Police S. Chandrasekhar Reddy confirmed that they will be shifted to quarantine centre.



    12.30 PM | KARNATAKA
    Six passengers in Dubai flight show symptoms of COVID-19
    In Bengaluru, six of the 195 passengers from Karnataka who arrived at the Kempegowda International Airport, Bengaluru from Dubai on Sunday have symptoms of COVID-19. They are suspected to have the virus, and their samples will be sent for testing.

    Health and Family Welfare Minister S. Sriramulu said that they have been admitted to the isolation facility of the Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Chest Diseases. He said that the remaining passengers will be taken to Akash Institute of Medical Sciences, Bengaluru.

    12.10 PM | BIHAR
    Bihar reports first death
    Bihar on Sunday reported first its death due to COVID-19. The test of the deceased was found positive. He was also undergoing treatment for kidney ailment at the Patna-based All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS).

    The deceased has been identified as Saif Ali, 38, from Munger district. He had recently returned from Qatar. The AIIMS officials have confirmed that deceased was COVID-19 positive.

    “He had travel history and was put under observation for sometime”, said director of AIIMS Dr. Prabhat Kumar Singh.


    Read more

    12 PM | TAMIL NADU
    Another COVID-19 positive case has been detected in Tamil Nadu. As per preliminary details, the patient is a traveller from Spain, and is undergoing treatment in isolation.


    11.30 AM | MUMBAI


    Mumbai records second COVID-19 death. A 63-year-old man who was admitted in the HN Reliance Hospital succumbed early on Sunday. The patient had diabetes and hypertension and developed acute respiratory distress syndrome leading to his death.


    11 AM | KARNATAKA
    Karnataka seals borders with all States
    The Karnataka government had decided to close all the State borders, Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa announced on Sunday morning. All the upcoming elections would be put off for the time being, he said.

    Victoria Hospital would be used especially to handle COVID-19 cases and the other patients there would be shifted to hospitals elsewhere.


    Read more

    11 AM | NOIDA
    Cluster sealed in Greater Noida after COVID patient detected
    A cluster comprising of commercial establishments and several housing societies was sealed in Greater Noida on Sunday after a COVID-19 positive patient was detected in the area.

    An order issued by B.N Singh, District Magistrate of Gautambuddh Nagar said that all blocks and residential societies in Alpha-1 sector shall remain temporarily sealed from 10 a.m. March 22 (Sunday) till 7 a.m. March 24.

    The order said that the decision was taken after a person residing in B-Block at Alpha 1 was detected COVID-19 positive.

    Any kind of movement by people and vehicles, except for emergency purposes have been prohibited in the area.

    10.30 AM | KARNATAKA
    33-year-old man who came from Australia tests positive
    A 33-year-old person who had arrived in Dharwad, Karnataka from Australia has been tested positive for COVID-19.

    Deputy Commissioner M. Deepa confirmed that he was the 21st case to be reported from Karnataka.

    Read more

    9.40 AM | HYDERABAD
    Prabhas in self-quarantine after returning from film’s shoot abroad
    Actor Prabhas has announced that he is in self-quarantine in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

    In a short statement posted on Twitter, the Baahubali actor said he recently returned from Georgia after completing a film’s shoot and therefore decided to keep himself insolation.

    “On safely returning from my shoot abroad, in light of increasing risks of COVID-19, I have decided to self-quarantine. Hope you all are also taking the necessary precautions to be safe,” Prabhas tweeted on Saturday.

    The actor is currently working on filmmaker Radha Krishna Kumar’s untitled film, which also features Pooja Hedge.


    Read more

    8.20 A.M | PUNJAB

    Punjab orders lockdown in few districts
    Amid rising number of COVID-19 cases, the Punjab government has ordered a lockdown in few districts till March 25 including Shahid Bhagat Singh Nagar (Nawanshahr), Hoshiarpur, Kapurthala and Jalandhar.

    Punjab Chief Secretary Karan Avtar Singh, in a statement said that ''establishments in districts of Nawanshahr and Hoshiarpur have been closed while the partial lockdown has been ordered in Jalandhar with effect from 7 a.m. on March 22 up to midnight of March 25 by the District Magistrate. Likewise, it has also been advised to close down establishments in district Kapurthala from March 23 as a precautionary measures.”


    Read more
    7.30 AM | RAJASTHAN
    Rajasthan announces complete lockdown till March 31
    In a late night decision, the Rajasthan government on March 21 announced a complete lockdown of the State till March 31 to contain the spread of coronavirus. All government and private offices, malls, shops, factories and public transport across the State will remain closed in the duration, while Rajasthan's borders with other States will be sealed.

    Only essential and medical services will be exempted from the lockdown, according to the orders issued after the decision was taken at a high-level meeting presided over by Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot at his residence. Mr. Gehlot said it was necessary for people to “stay indoors” to fight the pandemic.

    Read more


    Stay home for three months, UK tells 1.5 million most at risk
    Up to 1.5 million vulnerable people in Britain, identified as being most at risk from the coronavirus epidemic, should stay at home for at least 12 weeks, the government said Sunday.

    Those with underlying health conditions such as bone or blood cancers, cystic fibrosis, or who have had an organ transplant have been advised by health officials to do all they can to shield themselves from the virus, including confining themselves at home for a long period.

    "People should stay at home, protect our NHS and save lives," Communities secretary Robert Jenrick said in a statement.


    Read more


    Confined by virus, Frenchman runs marathon on his balcony
    In the age of confinement, Elisha Nochomovitz figured out a way to run a marathon anyway back and forth on his balcony.

    That’s right. He ran 42.2 kilometers (26.2 miles) straight, never leaving his 7-meter-long (23-foot) balcony.

    Like athletes who ran around their Wuhan apartments or cyclists who found ways to train in their locked-down Abu Dhabi hotel rooms, Nochomovitz wanted to show others that it’s possible to stay fit as virus containment measures tighten around the world.

    Read more

    How does soap help tackle COVID-19?








    Soap or sanitiser? Which works better?

    Volume 90%
    Why you should pay for quality journalism - Click to know more

    Related Topics
    Coronavirus
    SUBSCRIBE TO OUR DAILY NEWSLETTER

    Comments

    Related Articles

    Watch | What is contact tracing?


    Watch | Soap or sanitiser? Which works better?


Pakistan has 645 confirmed cases and 4 fatalities.Thanks for the concern though.
 
.
The number of hospital beds in India was around 0.7 per 1000 people in 2011, that translates to more than 1.1 million. Now the number would be much higher. This is an article from 2013 which gives the total no. of hospital beds in government hospitals to be around 1.3 million. That doesn't include private sector, which is the mainstay of Indian health system.

https://pib.gov.in/newsite/printrelease.aspx?relid=98206

This article from 2016 puts the number at 1.7 million

https://health.economictimes.indiat...m-of-2-beds-per-1000-sumeet-aggarwal/62992210

Currently, the number must be around 2 million. The writer is either an idiot, or high on some good shit.
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom